Commemoration: Contexts and Concepts

Transcription

Commemoration: Contexts and Concepts
Under the auspices of the President of Ireland’s Ethics
Initiative
Commemoration: Contexts and Concepts
September 3rd & 4th 2015 @ University College Cork
Across the island of Ireland, we have entered a ten-year period during which the centenaries of the
foundational events of our states and societies will take place. These events reflect inter-group conflict
between divergent nationalisms, major ideological shifts and fratricidal ideological conflict, the
establishment of institutions that enshrined the power balance between different groups and official
ideologies, and marked the shifting balance of power between labour and capital, and a shifting
relationship between women and the state. These furthermore took place in the broader context of the
First World War which brought to an end the 'long 19th Century' of relative peace and optimism and
ushered in the 'short 20th Century' as an 'age of extremes'. These are all events whose impact is still
'too early’ to determine and which demand careful reflection, as well as reflection on how society
reflects on them through commemorative practices.
Conference Organisers:
Dr John O’Brien, Waterford IT.
Dr Lorcan Byrne, UCC & Respond! College.
Dr Kieran Keohane, UCC.
email: [email protected]
Phone: 00 353 (0) 86 381 9001
While
the
conference
is
about
commemoration, our focus is not only on
Ireland, and not simply 'historical', nor about
'the past'. Rather our concern is about how
the past plays itself out in the present, and
how past & present recur into the future. If
"imagination
is
working
over
the
remembered" as James Joyce says, we are
interested also in what one might call
'memories of the future'. We are interested in
how recent historical events -the Peace
Process, the corruption Tribunals, scandals in
the Church and other institutions, the boom,
the 2008 crash, the Troika, Austerity and so
on, resonate with previous histories &
memories, in Ireland, in Greece, in Spain,
throughout the EU and elsewhere; how recent
events are forgotten so quickly, how they may
be remembered, and how their being
remembered may shape our imaginings and
recollections in the future.
Centre for the Study of the Moral Foundations
of Economy & Society (CSMS).
‘A Squadron of Bradleys Intercepts Natives Carrying Home Evidence
of Controlled Demolition in Sackville Street Dublin’ (Hillen 2007).
This conference will address both 'contexts', meaning
rich historical studies and thick descriptions of the
meaning and significance of these events, then studies
of the contemporary means of commemorating them.
We are also addressing 'concepts', meaning deep
theorisation of these substantive topics. We have
presently being referring to the work of authors such
as Maurice Halbwachs on collective memory, René
Girard on sacrificial foundations, Paul Connerton on
how societies remember and forget, Paul Ricoeur on
narrative, history and memory and Bernhard Giesen
on dealing with historical traumas.
Invited Participants Include:
Raffaella Baccolini, University of Bologna.
Seán Hillen, Artist.
Bernhard Geisen, University of Konstanz.
Michael Cronin, Dublin City University.
Bjorn Thomassen, Roskilde University.
Arpad Szakolczai, University College Cork.
Kieran Bonner, University of Waterloo.
The conference is organised under the auspices of
'The President of Ireland's Ethics Initiative', and so
one of our central concerns is ethical remembrance /
the ethics of memory / remembering ethics, "for it is
through remembering consciously and ethically that
we acquire the potential to gain release from past
wrongs and acquire also the resolution to anticipate
revivals of hate and exclusion" (President Michael D.
Higgins, 2015).
Rituals and practices of commemoration are important
as they are a source of ethics, shape collective identity
and foster solidarity, create traditions, give meaning
through providing a sense of where we have come
from and where we are going, they articulate the
material interests of group members and facilitate
collective action, they represent a way of processing
traumatic events of the past, and are potentially a
means of defusing conflict through dealing with shame
and anger over past actions. Such rituals and practices
are particularly important in the context of our current
age of permanent presentness and permanent change
(Bauman 1999), based on an anomic, post-traditional
culture, driven by the expansion of mediated
experiences and rapid change, in which ethical
memory has become clouded.
We invite papers, contributions, interventions
and thought-pieces from all fields and practices
in the arts, humanities and social science that
reflect on how our society has been shaped by
the past, and how our means of commemorating
the past shapes our present and future society.
Abstracts to [email protected]
by May 31st 2015.